[ noun ] internal organs collectively (especially those in the abdominal cavity) <noun.body> `viscera' is the plural form of `viscus'
innards \innards\ n. The internal organs of an animal collectively especially those in the abdominal cavity.
Syn: viscera. [WordNet 1.5]
Coins tend to carry sand and salt into the phones' innards, ruining the mechanisms, he said.
Matsushita will build the innards of the computer in Japan and ship them to Solbourne, which will combine them with screens, keyboards and software.
Among those products are trocars, sharp-pointed tubes that serve as ports of entry into the abdominal cavity for surgical instruments and a tiny camera that displays a patient's innards on a monitor.
But Sears, Chicago, has taken on a tough sell: It will have to convince consumers that a woven fabric stretched across the furniture frame is as strong as the traditional springs, webbing and other upholstery innards it replaces.
It is Tuck who volunteers for shrinkage, and who sails around someone else's innards in a fully equipped spacecraft.
From the cube-shaped black box that holds its electronic innards, to the sphinx-like monitor you can tilt at any angle with one finger, right down to the tiny, three-dimensional Next logos on every component, it is a masterpiece of industrial design.
Wreckers toil at the Homestead Works now, like scavengers picking innards of a carcass.
IBM already has two PS/2 models with the old-style innards.
The magazine's editors pored over the computer, testing its capabilities and photographing its innards.
Authorities then sought to kill each of the ferrets and test their innards for rabies.
But I was willing to make the investigation into my innards and come up with and strengthen that kernel of whatever part of my personality that might exist." The reviews indicate Sorvino's success.
When Claiborne makes his cornbread stuffing, he notes that it's "not essential to cook these innards until they're quite well-done" because they'll cook in the turkey.